In
a move that has the potential to weaken Indonesia's young democracy, some
political forces, including the United Development Party, or PPP, are pushing
for a fifth amendment of the 1945 Constitution, which
would require the country's vice president to be an
"indigenous Indonesian citizen."
The problem
with this move, which was announced during the PPP's recent leadership meeting,
is that there is no clear definition of what constitutes an "indigenous
Indonesian citizen."
The
Constitution only stipulates that the president of the Republic of Indonesia
must be an Indonesian citizen. There is no mention of his or her ancestry. It
does not define a concept such as "citizenship with foreign origin."
But how
close should a citizen be to his or her foreign ancestry to be accepted as an
indigenous citizen or otherwise? How many generations away from his or her
foreign ancestry should be taken as the limit to being an indigenous Indonesian?
The
Indonesian nation is made up of races and tribes from all over the world. There
are citizens of Arabic, Indian, Caucasian, Latino, Asian, African and other
racial backgrounds and yet everyone claims to be, and in fact is, an Indonesian
citizen.
Long before
the Republic of Indonesia was founded, there had been many kingdoms across the
archipelago. The Srivijaya empire even covered most of Southeast Asia and
ancient traders from Gujarat (India), China, Indochina, Europe, the Persian
Gulf, and Africa visited the archipelago, with many of them settling in
the country for generations. How can we trace their bloodlines from among the
hundreds of tribes constituting the Indonesian nation?
When the
republic was founded in 1945, nobody made an issue of freedom fighters' ethnic,
racial, or religious backgrounds. They were all united to build a new country.
Even in 1908, during the Dutch colonial era, as well as when youths from
various parts of the country gathered in October 1928 to set the tone for independence
by proclaiming their oath of unity, nobody made an issue of ethnic, racial, or
religious backgrounds.
So why now —
after 71 years of independence — ethnic and religious sentiments have cropped
up to spoil the political theater ahead of the Jakarta gubernatorial election?
This clearly proves that Indonesia's democracy is making progress in reverse —
going back more than a hundred years!
Such
political maneuvers raise tempting questions. For instance, if Jakarta Governor
Basuki "Ahok" Tjahaja Purnama were of Arab or Indian origin, would he
have been the target of verbal attacks? Or is this presumably religiously
motivated political maneuver directed at him in order to prevent him from ever
running for higher office?
Some have
argued that quite a good number of Muslim voters in Jakarta are being
brainwashed directly or indirectly to avoid electing Ahok for the emotional
reason that his ancestors were Chinese and he adheres to a minority religion.
Such kind of
brainwashing campaign grossly violates the first and second principles of the
Pancasila state ideology (belief in one God and Indonesian unity), and Article
28E of the Constitution, which guarantees freedom of religion for every
citizen. Yet the government appears to have difficulty stopping the
manipulation of religious sentiments in the political arena.
If this is
the case, Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) leaders would presumably stand behind Ahok to
defend the theory that races are created by God and not by man. In fact, Nusron
Wahid, former chairman of NU's youth organization GP Ansor, has openly said
that political attacks against Ahok simply because he is of Chinese origin
amounts to protesting God's decree to create human beings in races and
tribes.
Nusron has
remained consistent in this stance long before he joined Ahok's campaign team
for the Jakarta gubernatorial election. A question anti-Ahok campaigners cannot
answer, is can a leader with a softer character be able to clean the massive
corrupt culture in the bureaucracy and society? Indonesia has no precedent for
this!
In other
words, despite Ahok's "less polite" behavior in tackling the mess,
perhaps the corrupt culture cannot be overcome with a "more polite"
way. Time has destined a leader of Ahok's type to lead Jakarta as a barometer
and altogether a role model of transparency and good governance; and tough
leadership is perhaps the only way to make it happen — whether or not it is
Ahok who sits on top of Jakarta's bureaucracy.
Consequently,
a successor with weaker leadership qualities cannot continue his uncompromising
bureaucratic mess-cleaning aggressiveness, because weaker leadership would only
provide more opportunities for the corrupt culture to go viral.
What I am
trying to convey is not that Ahok should be reelected. That's not the issue.
Instead, Jakarta needs a leader of his tough type to clean up the mess, as a
good precedent for the rest of the country to follow.
Making his
ethnic and religious background an issue with which to remove him from office
is probably the work of pro-corruption and dirty-minded people who are hiding
behind the masks of piety and religiosity.
So high the
primordial sentiments that Ahok's 103-minute-long speech in the Thousand
Islands off the coast of Jakarta has been manipulatively cut to only 55 seconds
in order to suggest that he has defamed Islam for quoting a Koranic verse
disproportionately.
The truth is
that the context of his speech was political education. He was actually
educating people to not be easily brainwashed by opponents who tend to use
religious verses to avoid electing him. A careful study of his speech reveals
that he was blaming those who ride on religious sentiments to brainwash people
against electing him, but not defaming the Islamic holy book! This has been
totally misunderstood.
Should we
therefore blame him for having been born of Chinese ancestry and raised to be a
Christian? Not many people know that Ahok actually spent his student days
living with a Muslim family from South Sulawesi, in Kalibata, South Jakarta,
which he even to day regards very highly as his "second family."
I happened
to meet him in his second family's home at the commemoration of the 100th day
of his foster mother's death where he delivered a sentimental speech recalling
her prediction that one day he would become governor of Jakarta. So why is he
being portrayed as the "enemy" of so many fanatics who have
repeatedly called him an "infidel?" This is a question that does not
require long contemplation to find the answer.
Analysts
take this as a clear sign that fanatics do not want him to become governor
again because that would pave the way for him to run for vice president in the
next election. A possible Joko Widodo-Ahok pair would be unbeatable in the
2019 presidential election. So now is the time to cripple him — so goes
the theory of fanatical agitators currently struggling to stop him through
every possible avenue!
Senior
political analyst Pitan Daslani is a former journalist for the Jakarta Post,
Radio Deutsche Welle and Yomiuri Shimbun.
Let's be clear. When we read such rubbish it means that the reference to 'Indigenous' doesn't include non Javanese or non Sumatran. Would not envisage the power to be feeling warm and tingly if a West Papuan was proposed as President. Suddenly we would see just how racist and bigoted this position really is.
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